Wait! Before you go on:

Giles' Guide to the World of HTML. It more or less speaks for itself. It doesn't tell you everything you can do, but it describes how to make coloured text, lists, tables, pictures, and more!

Conways Game Of Life, which wont run if you havent got JavaScript. If you have however, its quite fun, especially with Netscape.

Windows Help. This was created for I.C.T. coursework, but I decided it was useful enough to leave here. Contains just about all the information a new user to Windows needs.

Blahfonts - Free PC fonts for the grabbing

These are a collection of fonts that I designed on the computer. You can download them absolutely for free, and copy them and give them to friends, etc.
Here are a few points:

Many thanks to Leigh Taylor for the Mac conversions of my fonts - please tell me if any of them don't work.

You cannot sell them, but you can copy them and use them as much as you want.

These are just made for fun, so there's no guarantee on quality. If however, you find something seriously wrong with them (like if they don't print on Postscript printers), please tell me.

Some people have had problems using the fonts. In particular,"It just opens up Microsoft Excel with a bunch of error messages."
and"They appear as small straight lines on Microsoft Word."

Ive included the dates when the fonts were finished when I could find them out.

Most of these contain all the special characters, punctuation, accents, etc. (unless font description says otherwise). Fonts now contain new Euro symbol which means they contain more characters than almost all fonts around.

I'd like to thank my Dad for making a wonderful piece of software for making fonts, and my friends for helping me to design them. Unfortunately I'm not giving Dad's program away.
The shareware font maker that I linked to here doesn't seem to exist. A few people haved asked me if I know of one which does. I'm afraid not.

Anyway, enough yakking, here are the fonts. There are currently 10 fonts on this page.

This is the first font that I designed on the computer. It's spiky, to make it look really angry. "I am angry, annoyed, furious and generally a bit peeved." My Mum said this and I put it here because it sounds nice. Anger looks good from about 24 point upwards. 5/10/1997

I'm not entirely sure what Zany means, but I'm sure it applies to this font. It's very weird and wobbles everywhere. You will find all the silly characters defined, but there are smaller versions of the capitals put into the lower case places. Use as large as possible and in small amounts, as it is rather hard to read.

This font, Squiggly, was partly designed by me and partly designed by my friend Francis Galloway. It's a sort of hallowe'en type font. Squiggly looks best large, but can be read as small as 10 point. 30/10/1997

Well, it is quite a stupid name, isn't it! It's also quite a stupid font. Both capitals and lower case letters look like capitals, but in different positions (see A in "What" and A in "A".)
If your word processor isn't very good at dealing with thin lines, don't use this font! The thin lines are fifty times thinner than the thick chunks. What A Stupid Name is pretty difficult to read, so is best used for short and large headings.14/10/1997 I think.

This chunky font was designed by another one of my friends, Nils Curtis George Frame Hagelberg. He originally used it for a project we were doing at school about superheroes ("Metal Man") and soon afterwards I had to design some letters in a hurry for another school project (making a magazine called "Mega Mag".)
This font has capitals and slightly smaller capitals and needs to be at least 24 points big or the little dents will be too small to see.

This font can be read at 10pt (with some practice). This was also designed by a friend, called Joe Greenwood. In case you're wondering, I do have my own ideas for fonts but I don't want to disappoint my friends.
As you can see, it looks a bit like handwriting with loops.

Now, I've been designing Blahfonts for almost a year, but before now there has been no Daily Blah font. So I designed this. I'm very proud that this can be read at 8pt and still looks good at 48pt. As you can see, it is similar to those Old-English fonts but slightly less fussy. 5/9/1998

I started designing this font as part of an English coursework (how sad can you get). We were making posters based on those by the Commission for Racial Equality (you can visit their website if you like) which used a very distinctive font indeed. I tried to design a font as similar to this as possible, and this is the result. Use this font is you want the effect of a really old badly made typewriter. You can try small writing, although I wouldn't recommend it. This font was finished exactly two years after Squiggly.30/10/1999

I admit I haven't been producing much over the past year or so, but I haven't forgotten about Blahfonts... This one's called Humbug, because it's stripey. It looks like someone's drawn outline letters then drawn stripes through with a marker pen. Although it was designed with this in mind, the actual process is more complicated - each of the transparent areas (holes) have to be defined as a separate contour. This font doesn't look at all impressive below 20pt - use it big and anti-aliased (smooth edges) if the software you are using supports it. 19/8/2000

This font is certainly quite odd. Although it might at first appear to be a normal sans-serif typeface, you will soon notice that some of the letters (e.g. A, B and M) are unusual shapes. Most characters can be read as small at 10pt.
5/11/2000

The name "fn0t".... don't ask. All characters in this font have the same width. This makes it good for console text or that sort of thing. In fact that's what it's designed for (see it in use in XTerm). It was designed for maximum legibility but also a distinctive appearance. NOTE: This font has changed slightly - previously, the back-quote character was rather thin and tended to be displayed as a single dot at certain sizes. This has now been fixed.
22/4/2003